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cbayer

(146,218 posts)
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 12:27 PM Jan 2014

The Challenges of Interfaith Dialogue

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/aamir-hussain/the-challenges-of-interfa_b_4581918.html

Aamir Hussain
Muslim Interfaith Activist

Posted: 01/15/2014 5:28 pm

The interfaith movement in the United States is growing. Led by organizations like the Interfaith Youth Core in Chicago, the Pluralism Project at Harvard, and the groundswell movement founded by Ms. Valarie Kaur (to name just a few), more and more Americans are engaging with people of different religious and spiritual identities than themselves. The mainstream media has finally started to pick up on this trend. Major news outlets like the New York Times, Washington Post, Public Broadcasting Service, and The Huffington Post frequently report on interreligious engagement.

As an American Muslim, I am very excited by these trends and hope to continue promoting interfaith work in 2014. However, as the interfaith movement grows, it is becoming increasingly important to discuss potential challenges of interfaith dialogue and how they can be addressed.

The first challenge is a lack of focus. For any interfaith dialogue to succeed, all parties must be clear on the conversation's goals. This can help people decide which conversations they should join. For example, if the goal is to discuss complex theological issues, it is necessary to include scripture experts, historians, linguists, and other academics. Lay people and usually younger people may not feel comfortable in these discussions. On the other hand, conversations focused around personal values and experiences would be more appealing to people who do not fit into a defined faith or spiritual category (e.g. agnostics or atheists) or people who are less interested in theology. Academics who want to debate religious minutiae would probably shy away from these discussions. Thus, it is necessary to hold multiple different types of conversations, each geared to a different audience.

The second challenge is when people feel that they need to "water down" or compromise their religious identity in order to fit in. This often occurs when dialogue participants come across an unresolvable difference: for example, whether Jesus was a prophet (the Muslim belief) or whether he was the son of God (the Christian belief). Ideally, interfaith dialogue is supposed to help each participant better understand their own religion and discover the areas in which their religion is unique. In the situation described, both parties should agree to disagree. They should accept that differences exist and seek to understand them without compromising their own beliefs. The prophet Muhammad (PBUH) experienced a similar situation when he was negotiating a treaty with non-Muslims. They offered to worship his god for one year if he promised to worship their many gods during the next year. His answer is described in Chapter 109, verse 6 of the Quran: "For you is your religion, and for me is my religion."

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The Challenges of Interfaith Dialogue (Original Post) cbayer Jan 2014 OP
If you really want to understand the challenges skepticscott Jan 2014 #1
!!!!! trotsky Jan 2014 #2
Apparently all of the skepticscott Jan 2014 #3
 

skepticscott

(13,029 posts)
3. Apparently all of the
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 05:15 PM
Jan 2014

Interfaithy people (all three) have nothing to say about this article, either.

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